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Friday, November 23, 2018

How To Help Your Favorite Author



Book launches are important to writers. Much like the way Nielsen Ratings uses sweeps periods throughout the year (Feb., May, July, Nov.) to determine numbers used in setting TV advertising costs, publishers use the first week of a book's sales to gauge a writer's popularity. These are the writer's die-hard fans, or fans in the subject matter of which the author is deemed to excel in writing about.

First week sales numbers determine many factors: how much more publicity money the publisher will free up to promote the book; whether they will continue to employ a writer or set him loose; and, if they do keep the writer, how much his or her next advance will be. Most authors will only make a best seller's hit in the opening week. The majority of books do not have long-term sustainability. Only a fraction of all the books ever published remain in print years after they come out.

So how can a reader help an author?
1. Pre-order the book. Whether on line or at a reporting store, all pre-orders count toward first day of sales, and ultimately, that week's final tally.
2. Use a reporting store. Not all book stores report to the New York Times, which uses its numbers to determine its rankings list. The New York Time Book Review is the premiere list all authors want to be on.
3. If you forgot to pre-order, or your paycheck doesn't come in until the Friday after the book debut, no problem. Books in the U.S. drop on Tuesdays. As long as you purchase it by Sunday night, it still counts as first week's sales. The book lists are measured in weeks.

So how can you tell if a bookstore is a reporting store?
1. Look at their events schedule. If they are booking Stephen King, Tom Clancy, Amy Schumer, Hilary Clinton, George R.R. Martin, or other top authors to sign books, then they are very likely a reporting store.  And with chains like Barnes & Noble, only a select few fall into the NY Times reporting category.
2. Amazon.com and B&N.com are also reporting stores, so buying on line helps.

But my favorite author isn't a best seller. Does this still matter?
You bet it does. Your author may not make the top 20 of the main best seller's list, but there are also genre lists for fantasy, science fiction, romance, westerns, non-fiction, and more. Books that don't make the main list can still score on the genre list. Maybe it's number 346 on the main list, which includes non-fiction, but it's number 21 on the mystery list. That's still a big help to the writer and the people promoting his/her book.

So help your favorite author out when you can. The more they can show their publishers their success, the more likely they are to continue writing your favorite stories, and not have to resort to teaching or taking a corporate job, which will delay their next story from reaching you. Ninety nine percent of writers are not millionaires. The John Grishams of the world are the exception, not the rule. 

 Edward Lazellari is an editor in New York City and writes fantasy fiction for TOR Books. The final book of his Guardians of Aandor trilogy drops on Dec. 4th, 2018, available wherever books are sold.

https://www.amazon.com/Blood-Ten-Kings-Guardians-Aandor-ebook/dp/B078X243FC/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1528212584&sr=1-1&keywords=Blood+of+Ten+Kings+edward+lazellari

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4 comments:

  1. Gotta tell you, I think your publishers made a huge mistake in pricing your "Blood of Ten Kings" at $17 for the ebook version. I could stomach the first two books' price, but that doubling up was a showstopper. Best of luck and don't quit your day job.

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    1. I apologize for that. I have no control over what Tor prices my books at. I get the books for half price, so I will offer you this since you review books; if you purchase the first two books on your own, I will sell you Blood of Ten Kings for $15. I will cover the postage to send it to you too. If interested, my email is edlazellari@aol.com . You can also contact me through Twitter, Facebook, or Goodreads. (I'm everywhere...like Batman.)

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    2. You certainly don't need to apologize, that is ALL on them. I just feel bad for you, that is all. Honestly, I thought you were an indie until I saw the price of book 3 and then I checked the publisher and voila, it all became clear.

      Thank you for you kind offer, but right now I pretty much only do ebooks, as I've been a diabetic for 25 years and it's affecting my eyes. And I'm lazy and like to hold my kindle in one hand. I do plan on reading and reviewing the first 2 books, which will probably happen later this year and maybe by that time book 3 will be on par for the kindle version.

      Cheers!

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  2. It's a shame you don't have a donate button! I'd most certainly donate to this outstanding blog! I guess for now i'll settle for book-marking and adding your RSS feed to my Google account. I look forward to fresh updates and will talk about this site with my Facebook group. Talk soon!

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